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Microsoft To Buy Norwegian Search Firm Fast Search & Transfer For $1.23 Billion

By Dianne See Morrison - Tue 08 Jan 2008 04:05 AM PST

Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) will buy Norwegian web and mobile enterprise search software firm Fast Search & Transfer in a deal that values the company at 6.6 billion kroner ($1.23 billion), reports Bloomberg. The software giant will pay 19 kroner ($3.54) for each Fast share.

Fast Search is currently unprofitable and has struggled in the past year to stay afloat. It reported a $100 million loss in the third quarter, and a $26 million loss in the second quarter. In August it cut jobs and restructured the company, and has been focusing lately on mobile search. It formed a joint venture with Japanese internet service company Rakuten to provide mobile search and advertising services in Japan. In December it launched an enhanced mobile search platform that also includes personalization and recommendation technology. 

Fast’s board unanimously supports the deal, and two of Fast’s largest shareholders, Orkla and Hermes Focus Asset Management Europe (total holding 37 percent) have already accepted the bid. Microsoft expects the transaction to be completed in the second quarter of 2008.

NYTimes: Microsoft has already offered enterprise search from SharePoint, a product in the Office family designed for groups of workers to collaborate on projects. And Microsoft already has a partnership with Fast, for providing enterprise search. But by purchasing Fast, Microsoft can more fully integrate the Norwegian company’s technology into its Office technology. 

Posted in: Companies, Microsoft, Countries, UK & Europe, Mobile, Technologies/Formats, Search

Tags: fast search & transfer,


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3 Responses:
  • From Ted Cahall Wed 09 Jan 2008 05:44 AM

    The *Enterprise* Search industry has become a commodity.  Why do any web companies pay for FAST or any other high priced enterprise search product when open-source SOLR on top of Lucene exists?  SOLR has been around for 2 years and Lucene is in version 2.2 and is at least 5 years old now.  Many major sites use these products already.  Possibly Microsoft wants FAST’s engineering talent or feels there are still many non-web companies out there without decent tech staff that need site search on there “corp” or marketing web site… $1.23B seems like a lot for mobile search.  At CNET, we “passed” on FAST in 2004 (after the demise of Alta Vista Enterprise search - which FAST bought) when we created SOLR on top of Lucene - and never looked back.

  • From tom Wed 09 Jan 2008 07:20 AM

    i think the write-up misses the mark. look at the last 10 customer wins and count how many are focused on mobile search. okay, now look at the last 25, 50, 100. The company had some serious accounting issues but never lost sight of its mission in the market.

  • From hökkeş keskin Mon 18 Feb 2008 12:24 AM

    ben norveç de çalışmak için başvuru yapmak istiyorum ben gaziantep üniversitesi işletme mezunuyum vasıflı olmak ve norveç ekonomisine katkıda bulunmak istiyorum

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